I am supposed to send some artwork to the printers tomorrow and their guidelines requires it to be CMYK.
I have installed the plugin Separate+ from the 'gimp-plugin-registy' package. I have also installed some ICC colour profiles from the 'icc-profiles' package.
When I try to use the Separate+ plugin all I can get it to output is an image that looks like the original but with the colours inverted.
How can I convert my image to CMYK?
I realize this is an old question, but I just stumbled upon it and found the answer. After you separate the image into the CMYK channels, you get a .tif image with 4 layers (one for each color). This image looks inverted because each area where this is white/grey represents a certain amount of cyan, magenta, yellow, or black.
Once you have this, just go to Image -> Separate -> Export and export your image as a .tif. This will repackage your image with the CMYK profile you choose, and when you view it, it will be the right print colors.
You can also use Image -> Separate -> Proof, and select the color profile of your monitor and it will generate a .tif preview with all the right colors. It's a pretty nice plugin!
Super easy with ImageMagick (preinstalled in every Ubuntu):
Note: the exported file would be quite large (no matter the tool), so it's better to include compression - for TIFF the most widely used is LZW.
More info e.g. here.
Have you tried this:
source : here
The Separate+ plugin for GIMP:
Load your file into GIMP. Make sure to save the file separately as flattened. Make sure you have registered any color profile you want to use (icc). If you have an ICC file you want to use; before you startup GIMP, right-click on it and the Windows XP menu will say "Install Profile" ... click that.
Back to GIMP... Click on Image > Separate Click on Separate in the menu... In the first dropdown click on your source (sRGB) more than likely. In the second dropdown click on the ICC that you want to use or provide the path. Click on Rendering Intent to select "relative colorimetric" Then just Click OK. You will get four layers, C, M, Y and K You can see it all put back together by Clicking Image > Separate > Separate then Proof If satisfied, you are ready to go. Click on Image > Separate > Separate and then Export. This you can use to combine all to CMYK format and save as a .tif. That is it in a nutshell with some variances... Hope this helps.
I gave up on Gimp as far as converting to cmyk - just install Krita its also open source and free. I no longer require photoshop. I use Affinity Publisher and will probably purchase Affinity Photo as well but for what I require now Krita works just fine. I simply added the cmyk profile I need, which is so simple to do in Krita.